When it comes to actual human rights, the United Nations Human Rights Council reflexively discharges obfuscation, like a squid and its ink. That notwithstanding, the Council's fraudulence was made perfectly clear last week, when a routine hearing on "the Occupied Palestinian Territory" was disrupted by candor.

John Dugard, a U.N. "special rapporteur" on human rights, delivered a treatise on Israel's "colonialism and apartheid," denouncing the purported way in which the Palestinians are "brutally subjugated by a Western-affiliated regime." The envoy was given shows of support from the likes of Council members Cuba and Pakistan, as well as the "observer" states Sudan, Syria and Iran. The last accused Israel of "terrorist activities." Just another day in Geneva.

The U.S. put forward a tepid rejoinder, calling the remarks "unhelpful." Enter Hillel Neuer, executive director of the NGO U.N. Watch. Seated before the Council, Mr. Neuer had the temerity to point up its modus operandi. "The dictators who run this Council," he said, "couldn't care less about the Palestinians, or about any human rights. They seek to demonize Israeli democracy, to delegitimize the Jewish state."

He continued, "They also seek something else: to distort and pervert the very language and idea of human rights." Council President Luis Alfonso de Alba furiously responded, "For the first time in this session I will not express thanks for that statement," thus violating U.N. protocol. He ruled the remarks inadmissible to the official record, and prohibited further statements "in similar tones." In the depths of the U.N., this was of course logical: Mr. Neuer's commentary had been accurate.

Copyright 2007, Wall Street Journal

'I Will Not Express Thanks'

New York Sun, March 30, 2007

Every once in a while there comes a diplomatic moment to remember, and New Yorkers who want to share one can go up on youtube.com and watch the representative in Geneva of UN Watch, Hillel Neuer, in a March 23 speech before the 4th session of the Human Rights Council. In the adjacent columns, we print the full text of his remarks, lamenting the loss of the dream of Eleanor Roosevelt and other architects of the human rights movement within the United Nations system. Mr. Neuer offers the substance. But it's worth watching the full clip (it's only a few minutes long) to catch the scandalous behavior of the president of the council, as he — for what may be the only time in its history — refuses to thank a speaker for his intervention and declares he will ban Mr. Neuer, or any other critic of the commission, if he says anything similar again.

To provide the full context, UN Watch has put together a compendium of clippings called "Admissible and Inadmissable at the U.N. Human Rights Council." It shows actual film clips of the president of the Human Rights Council, Luis Alfonso de Alba of Mexico, thanking various diplomats for their testimony. He thanks a speaker for Zimbabwe talking about the ignorance of a delegate who has criticized human rights under President Mugabe. He thanks the delegate from Cuba for insulting a human rights expert who exposed abuses of the communist regime. When the permanent observer of Palestine asserts that the one that has a "monopoly on human rights violations" is Israel, which, he adds, is the darling of not only the ambassadors of America and Canada but also of the human rights commissioner, Louise Arbour, the observer is thanked by Mr. de Alba. On the clip one can see Mr. de Alba thanking the delegation of Sudan for a statement saying that reports of violence against women in Darfur has been "exaggerated."

Then one can watch and hear an envoy from Nigeria assert that "stoning under Sharia law for unnatural sexual acts … should not be equated with extrajudicial killings …" Or watch an envoy of Iran defend the Holocaust denial conference. Or watch a defense of the Hezbollah terrorist organization. Or speaker after speaker liken Israel to the Nazis, only to get thanked by Mr. de Alba or whoever is presiding. Then one can watch Mr. de Alba lean back demonstrably in his chair and fold his arms across his face and adopt a disapproving visage as Mr. Neuer of UN Watch begins his recent testimony. He notes that 60 years ago, Eleanor Roosevelt, Rene Cassin, and others gathered on the banks of Lake Geneva to reaffirm the principle of human dignity and created the Commission on Human Rights. He asks what has become of "this noble dream" and offers a devastating answer with a reprise of all the human rights abuses on which the council has been silent.

"Why has this council chosen silence?" Mr. Neuer asks. "Because Israel could not be blamed." He ticks off the actions against Israel, the only one the council takes. When Mr. Neuer is done, Mr. de Alba says, "for the first time in this session, I will not express thanks for that statement. ... I will not tolerate any similar statements in the council." And he threatens to strike any similar statements from UN Watch from the record of the proceedings. We had to tip our hat to Mr. Neuer, who has, on occasion, written for these pages. Newspapermen have to have strong stomachs, but it's nothing compared to what he needs to sit through these sessions. He presents with memorable force and dignity. The compendium of clips runs only seven minutes or so and is winging its way around the World Wide Web. It's worth watching, a reminder of the wisdom of the decision of America's former ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, and his colleagues in the Bush administration to stand down from participating in this charade.

Copyright 2007, New York Sun

The UN's human rights charadeNational Post, March 31, 2007

Once again, the newly minted United Nations Human Rights Council has proven itself to be just as cynical and useless as the UN Commission on Human Rights it replaced last year.

On Friday, the Council wrapped up its forth session since its inception. Despite evidence from its own investigators that the genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan is being perpetrated by that country's dictatorial Islamist government, the Council was unable even to call the mass killings a genocide, much less pin blame on Khartoum. Muslim and African representatives would permit only an expression of "deep concern" for the murder of hundreds of thousands, the displacement of two million or more, and the systematic rape of women and girls.

The point of reconstituting the old commission as the new council a year ago was to prevent such shams. But the new body has been as wilfully blind as the one it superseded. The world would probably be better off if it were disbanded.

This unwillingness to "name names" is part of a new trend at the UN. Last fall, one of the General Assembly's six standing policy committees recommended an end to "name-and-shame" human-rights reports that single out particular countries for criticism. Human-rights experts within the organization recommended, instead, working quietly with abuser nations to convince them to end the murder, torture, maiming and political imprisonment of dissident citizens. Some good that would do.

Too many UN member states already scoff at the body's rebukes. The UN has no standing army with which to protect human rights, and economic sanctions almost never work because some country or other will ignore them.

Such is the case with Sudan and its actions in Darfur.

China--itself one of the worst rights abusers in the world--has long protected Sudan from censure at the UN, and has continued to prop up the Khartoum regime with trade and aid.

Still, on a symbolic level, it is a shame the UN Human Rights Commission was not more forthright in its condemnations of Sudan. Two weeks ago, its own fact-finding mission ruled that Sudan's government "has manifestly failed to protect the population of Darfur from large-scale international crimes, and has itself orchestrated and participated in those crimes." Friday, the commission voted merely to "take note" of the report.

Many argue that there is nothing short of all-out military invasion that the West could do to stop the Darfur genocide. But since it is unlikely that any Western nation -- including Canada -- will devote a sizeable force to such an enterprise, other options should be explored.

The National Post is currently running a series of essays commissioned by STAND Canada (Students Taking Action Now: Darfur) outlining some of these options. In one instalment appearing in Thursdays's edition, for instance, former Liberal cabinet ministers Lloyd Axworthy and Allan Rock argued for increased name-and-shame diplomacy, the freezing of Khartoum's ruling generals' Western assets, as well as a protective force of at least 20,000 troops assembled in concert with the African Union. These are all ideas worth trying. And since the UN clearly isn't going to take the initiative in Sudan, the community of civilized nations should.

While we are on the subject, it is worth nothing that the UN's new prohibition on name-and-shame comes with certain notable exceptions. In the same month the commission refused to hear tales of mass rape in Sudan and Burma, the UN was accepting motions from Iran, China, Russia, Cuba and other abusers condemning the United States and Canada for their human rights records. Canada was also singled out for its official use of the term "visible minorities," which the UN declared an expression of racism.

Then there is Israel, which has been a subject of obsession at the United Nations since the Jewish State came into being six decades ago.

As Hillel Neuer, executive director of the NGO United Nations Watch, told the 4th plenary session of the UN Human Rights Council on March 23, the Council has ignored crises all over the world -- from Darfur to Zimbabwe to Central Asia to Arabon-Arab killings in Gaza -- all the while passing resolution after resolution against the Middle East's only true democracy.

It was a trenchant critique that went right to the core of the Council's failings. So how did the Council's President, Mexico's Luis Alfonso De Alba, respond? By shooting the messenger, of course.

"For the first time in this session I will not express thanks for that statement," he huffed. "I will not tolerate any similar statements in the Council. The way in which members of this Council were referred to, and indeed the way in which the Council itself was referred to, all of this is inadmissible ? I would urge you in any future statements to observe some minimum proper conduct and language. Otherwise, any statement you make in similar tones to those used today will be taken out of the records."

His defensive outburst is a fitting symbol of what the Human Rights Council has become. Killing thousands in Darfur -- that's not so bad. But having the guts to tell the Council what a joke it's become -- well, that's truly unforgivable.

Copyright 2007, National Post

UN's 'noble dream' a nightmare

Steven EdwardsNational Post, March 31, 2007

UNITED NATIONS — Some of the world's most heinous human rights abusers have made outrageous statements in succeeding human rights chambers of the United Nations over the years, and when the chairpersons at such gatherings subsequently thank the speakers for their diatribes, UN apologists say: "That's just UN protocol at work."

The apologists have some explaining to do following a Human Rights Council address by Hillel Neuer, a Montrealer who heads the Geneva-based UN Watch monitoring group.

Far from being thanked for his presentation, he was warned by council president Luis Alfonso De Alba of Mexico that if he ever addressed the chamber in such a "tone" again, his words would be struck from the record.

Did he offend? If you're a despot, you would have been burning with rage. If you're a democrat who actually cares about such concepts as fair treatment and human decency, you would have been nodding your head in agreement at Mr. Neuer's challenge to the council's claim to be an internationally relevant human rights monitor.

Mr. Neuer made hard-hitting references to the council's record since the UN General Assembly created it just over a year ago to replace the discredited Human Rights Commission, which had become infiltrated with human rights abuser states who engineered self-serving resolutions.

His presentation suggested the council is no better than the commission when it comes to denouncing human rights violations wherever they may occur.

He forcefully pointed out that only when it comes to focusing on Israel — a common target throughout the UN system for Muslim and anti-West blocs — is the council ready to condemn or chastise (something it has done nine times over the past nine months).

Because it is so blinkered, Mr. Neuer lamented, the 47-member council has turned the "noble dream" for justice of Eleanor Roosevelt, Canadian John Humphrey and other founders of the UN's human rights architecture "into a nightmare."

Countries on the council that global monitors such as Human Rights Watch say have poor human rights records include Azerbaijan, China, Cuba, Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Canada has a seat until 2009, but the United States recently declined for the second year to stand for election to the body, saying it has "thus far not proved itself to be…credible."

Whether you agree or not with the substance of what Mr. Neuer had to say, any believer in freedom of speech would be alarmed by Mr. De Alba's admonishment.

True, Mr. Neuer will have touched the nerves of several council members and their allies as he illustrated his points by using such terms as "Middle East dictators," the "racist murderers and rapists of Darfur women," the "occupiers of Tibet," and the "butchers of Muslims in Chechnya."

But to put Mr. De Alba's admonishment in context, UN Watch has researched what others have said in the council chamber to which the body's president did not say: "I'm not in a position to thank you for your statement … I will not tolerate any similar statements in the council."

Playing on Mr. De Alba's charge that Mr. Neuer's references were "inadmissible," the UN Watch file is presented in a video available on YouTube titled: "Admissible and Inadmissible at the UN Human Rights council."

It and a research document show Mr. De Alba greets with thanks or otherwise allows speeches or acts in which:

- The Zimbabwe delegate calls his Finnish counterpart "ignorant" and accuses him of "astonishing and astounding hypocrisy."

- The Cuban ambassador describes a UN expert's report on abuses in Cuba as "libellous," and tells her directly: "There is … a significant contribution you can make, and that would be by quitting."

- The Palestinian representative says in reference to Canada and Louise Arbour, the Canadian jurist turned UN Human Rights Commissioner: "The one who has a monopoly on the violation of human rights is Israel … the darling of the ambassador of Canada and the darling of the High Commissioner."

- A Sudanese official says: "Incidents of violence against women have been exaggerated."

- The Nigerian ambassador says of attacks on homosexuals: "Death penalty by stoning for unnatural sexual acts … should not be equated with extrajudicial killings."

- The Iranian ambassador says in a letter that the Holocaust is a "historical claim," the "number of perished" is a particularly "legitimate question."

The video contains more examples -- concluding with Mr. Neuer's speech followed by Mr. De Alba's response.

A member of the New York bar who attended Montreal's Concordia and McGill universities, Mr. Neuer became executive director of UN Watch in 2004. Though affiliated with the American Jewish Committee, the group comments on a broad range of human rights issues, expressing "deep disappointment" at the council's "weak consensus resolution" yesterday on the human rights situation in Darfur.

Despite receiving an independent report squarely blaming the Arab-led government in Khartoum of being ultimately behind much of the Darfur violence, council members stopped short of endorsing the accusation.

Last month, UN Watch issued a report card on Canada's record on the council, charging it rarely speaks out against the worst global bullies. In joining the consensus yesterday on the Darfur resolution, Canada made no public statement before the council on that issue.

At least Ottawa doesn't risk being censored.

Watch Out

Michael WeissSlate, March 30, 2007

Bloggers cheer Hillel Neuer of Geneva-based nongovernmental organization UN Watch for his fierce denunciation of the U.N. Human Rights Council. They also suss out what makes a New York apartment a romantic deal-breaker.

Watch out: Hillel Neuer of UN Watch delivered a stunning rebuke to the U.N. Human Rights Council March 23 for its lopsided condemnation of Israel to the total silence about human rights violations in other countries like Cuba, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Zimbabwe, and Nigeria. Council President Luis Alfonso De Alba refused to thank Neuer for his speech—a procedural first that prompted UN Watch to assemble this video of rhetoric that evidently does warrant warm gratification from the body. Opening itself up to further scorn, the council Monday voted to abandon all inquiries into the human rights abuses of Iran and Uzbekistan.

At British democratic socialist blog Harry's Place, commenter Nomist, says: "I was sitting there with a different delegation when [Hillel] made that speech, and I can tell you that the atmosphere in the room dropped about 10 degrees over the course of his speech. The sad thing is that he's right. Earlier that day you had the Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories declare that, because Israel is a 'Western-affiliated' state, the West cannot expect the Developing world to do ANYTHING about Darfur, Zimbabwe et al until it takes care of the Israel/Palestine situation. In other words, the human rights of everyone in the developing world are being held hostage to the affairs of a few million people between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea."

Kathy at Screw the UN points out, a touch unsurprisingly, that: "Not only did President Alba refuse to thank Mr. Neuer for his statements; but then threatened to remove any more truthful statements about the treatment of Israel by the UN Human rights council from the record. Sad, Mr. Neuer held up a mirror to the UN Human Rights council and they refused to look in. This council is a useless organization and it proved that it intends to remain that way." At Meta Rhetoric, Omri Ceren, a doctoral candidate in rhetoric, anatomizes De Alba's censorious reply: "You'll notice that the chair didn't actually rebut any of the accusations. He did the procedural equivalent of putting his hands over his ears and yelling 'I can't hear you'. How dignified. And how very typical of the United Nations."

And Elizabeth Cassidy, a member of UN Watch guest-blogging at international law site Opinio Juris, remarks on the council's bloodless resolution passed on the genocide in Darfur, which somehow managed to elide the Sudanese government's responsibility for it. Cassidy adds: "In its nine months of existence, the Council has condemned only one country in the entire world for human rights violations: Israel. At this session, the Council passed yet another resolution—its ninth—against the Jewish state."

Michael Weiss, a writer in New York, is co-founder and managing editor of Snarksmith.com.
Copyright 2007, Slate

New name, but the shame is still the same

Alan GoldThe Australian, April 17, 2007

VIOLENCE and the murder of citizens in dozens of countries throughout the world should be of the greatest concern to the UN Human Rights Council, the phoenix that rose from the ashes of the disgraced UN Human Rights Commission.

But the council is apparently more concerned with polite conversation and respect, and it's showing all the hallmarks of following in the footsteps of its notorious predecessor.
The old 53-member commission was scrapped because its constituent members - countries with abysmal records of human rights abuses against their own citizens - were never criticised for what they were doing.

While millions died or were raped or abducted in Darfur, Rwanda, Bosnia and other hell-holes, the Geneva-based human rights bodies talked and talked and criticised anybody but the governments that made their citizens' lives the stuff of nightmares. Yet it passed resolution after resolution against a single state: Israel.

It was hoped the new and smaller council, given the mandate to address all human rights violations, would have learned from the mistakes of its predecessor.

But if a recent interchange between council president Luis Alfonso de Alba and UN Watch is anything to go by, the members of the council are singing from the same discredited song-sheet as their predecessors. And the weakest and most abused people on earth will be the sufferers.

Giving testimony before the fourth session of the council in Geneva recently, UN Watch executive director Hillel Neuer said: "Faced with compelling reports from around the world of torture, persecution and violence against women, what has the council pronounced and what has it decided? Nothing. Its response has been silence. Its response has been indifference. Its response has been criminal."

De Alba had to listen in rising fury as Neuer continued to denounce the UN council in a scathing condemnation of its bias.

"The entire rest of the world, millions upon millions of victims in 191 countries, continue to go ignored," Neuer said. He claimed that racist murderers and the rapists of Darfur women insisted they cared about the rights of Palestinian women; that the occupiers of Tibet insisted they cared about those they occupied; and that the butchers of Muslims in Chechnya insisted they cared about Muslims.

It was a stunning denunciation, a non-government organisation laying bare the mendacity and prejudice of a key UN body. Yet Neuer hadn't finished.

He excoriated Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi for their support of Palestinian rights against Israel while remaining silent when Palestinian factions commit human rights abuses against each other.

So what was de Alba's reaction to the tirade? Did he look in any way humiliated as the failings of his council were exposed for the entire world to see?

Did he hang his head in shame for the countless men, women and children whom he and the council failed to protect and who were the victims of some of the world's most unrelenting abusers of human rights? Did he raise his voice on issues where he and his council had been woefully silent?

No. Instead de Alba upbraided the young man from the NGO for rudeness and demanded that any future statements "should observe some minimum proper conduct and language". He said: "For the first time in this session I will not express thanks for that statement. I shall point out to the ... representative of (UN) Watch ... that I will not tolerate any similar statements in the council. The way in which members of this council were referred to, and indeed the way in which the council itself was referred to, all of this is inadmissible. Any statement you make in similar tones to those used today will be taken out of the records."

For the UN Human Rights Council, it seems, politeness has to come before the rights of the abused. How civilised.

Alan Gold is a Sydney writer. To see the exchange online, visit:www.unwatch.orgCopyright 2007, The Australian

"Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim," author and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel said in accepting his Nobel Peace Prize. "Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Sometimes we must interfere."

On Friday, March 23, Montreal native Hillel Neuer, executive director of the Geneva-based agency UN Watch, did just that — he interfered.

He got up in front of the UN Human Rights Council and offered a scathing assessment of its track record. It was perhaps the most worthwhile statement to come out of a UN agency session in a very long time.

A year ago, the council replaced the defunct UN Human Rights Commission which, made up mostly of non-democratic states, was mandated to monitor and report on human rights violations worldwide. It failed miserably because the world's worst human rights violators (China, Russia and Sudan among them) became an integral part of the commission itself, condoning the atrocities they were supposed to be policing.

Unfortunately, not much has changed. Time and time again this new body continues to turn its back on those most in need. It has ignored the persecution of the people of Tibet, the millions suffering in Darfur, and the crisis facing Muslims living in Chechnya.

"Faced with compelling reports from around the world of torture, persecution, and violence against women, what has the council pronounced, and what has it decided? Nothing. Its response has been silence. Its response has been indifference. Its response has been criminal," Neuer said.

Harsh words, perhaps, but undoubtedly warranted. The UN Human Rights Council is well known for its deafening silence -- except when it comes to Israel. Then it roars like a lion, just as its predecessor did.

In its brief history, the council "has enacted one resolution after another condemning one single state: Israel. The entire rest of the world, millions upon millions of victims, in 191 countries -- continue to go ignored."

Why is this council neglecting the world's downtrodden? Why this disparaging preoccupation with the only democratic nation in the Middle East? What is the reason for this selective criticism, this blatantly disproportionate attention to Israel? Neuer offered the following explanation:

"They seek to demonize Israeli democracy, to delegitimize the Jewish state, to scapegoat the Jewish people. They also seek something else: To distort and pervert the very language and idea of human rights."

This is not how the institution was intended to run and it is certainly not the same human rights regime envisioned by such founders as Eleanor Roosevelt, Rene Casin and Canada's own John Humphrey, the principal author of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. He designed the declaration around the same core values that we enjoy here in Canada -- values such as freedom, dignity and social justice.

The council itself is supposed to protect people who are denied such values. It has done nothing of the sort, choosing instead to ignore the world's most vulnerable.

And when Neuer pointed that out, he was neither applauded nor commended. He was threatened. "I will not tolerate any similar statements in the council," thundered Human Rights Council president Luis Alfonso de Alba. "The way in which members of this council were referred to, and indeed the way in which the council itself was referred to, all of this is inadmissible...Any statement you make in similar tones to those used today will be taken out of the records."

So, now we know how the Human Rights Council deals with criticism -- it simply strikes it from the record. No discussion, no debate, no forum in which to disagree. And so, it seems, we can say goodbye to another core democratic value we hold so dear here in Canada, the freedom of speech. Isn't it ironic that an organization whose mandate is to protect human rights can at the same time choose to deny perhaps our most basic right? This might be comical if it weren't so dangerous.

It is time for Canadians to take a stand against such hypocrisy. Western nations must speak up against this corruption or consider dropping out of this tainted organization altogether.

Neuer's address was a colossal condemnation of what is a deplorable excuse for a human rights body. His concluding statement was the perfect ending to a just and accurate commentary;

"You ask: What has become of the founders' dream? With terrible lies and moral inversion, it is being turned into a nightmare."

For this we say bravo to Hillel Neuer. And should the Council succeed in expunging his speech from the records, then so be it. It will never succeed in abolishing the truth.

Moshe Ronen is the National Chair of the Canada-Israel Committee. Hillel Neuer's speech to the UN Human Rights Council can be found on the UN Watch website, www.unwatch.org
Copyright 2007, The Vancouver Sun, Winnipeg Free Press, Edmonton Journal

Michael H. Cognato
Blog by the editors of Foreign Policy, March 29, 2007

The U.N. Human Rights Council, it seems, is not entirely without backbone. This week, of course, it excused the human rights records of Iran and Uzbekistan without comment, as Passport noted yesterday. Criticism of the Council itself, however, is far too much for the delicate sensibilities of the ambassadors. A representative from U.N. Watch called the Council out on its dereliction of duty in testimony before the august body, and in return was pointedly "not thanked" by the chair. That's about as close to an outright slap in the face as modern diplo-speak at the U.N. gets.

U.N. Watch has learned its lesson, though, and put together an instructive video on what is, and what is not, acceptable in the U.N. Human Rights Council, a bonus Thursday Video this week.

On Friday, March 23, Hillel Neuer, the executive director of UN Watch, gave a speech before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. He took the Council stingingly to task:

Six decades ago, in the aftermath of the Nazi horrors, Eleanor Roosevelt, Réné Cassin, and other eminent figures gathered here, on the banks of Lake Geneva, to reaffirm the principle of human dignity. They created the Commission on Human Rights. Today, we ask: What has become of their noble dream?

In this session we see the answer. Faced with compelling reports, from around the world, of torture, persecution, and violence against women, what has the Council pronounced, and what has it decided?

Nothing. Its response has been silence. Its response has been indifference. Its response has been criminal.

Neuer went on to note the strange fact that the Council, in the face of flagrant abuses of human rights, ranging from the murder by Hamas gunmen of three Palestinian children in Gaza City to the mass rapes and genocide in Darfur, has enacted numerous resolutions condemning Israel—and none condemning any other state. (Joshua Muravchik made a similar observation in this post.)

As shocking as this is, the response of Council president Luis Alfonso de Alba shocks still further:

For the first time in this session I will not express thanks for that statement. I shall point out to the distinguished representative of the organization that just spoke, the distinguished representative of United Nations Watch, if you’d kindly listen to me. I am sorry that I’m not in a position to thank you for your statement. I should mention that I will not tolerate any similar statements in the Council. The way in which members of this Council were referred to, and indeed the way in which the Council itself was referred to, all of this is inadmissible. In the memory of the persons that you referred to, founders of the Human Rights Commission, and for the good of human rights, I would urge you in any future statements to observe some minimum proper conduct and language. Otherwise, any statement you make in similar tones to those used today will be taken out of the records.

This is the first speech ever to be rejected in this way by the Council. Proof, one might argue, of the speech’s truth and value. Read the whole text of Neuer’s speech (and watch it on video) here.